Germany has a dense network of campsites and dedicated motorhome stopovers, often with paid electricity, water and waste disposal.
Camper Rules Assistant
Build a country route and get compact allowed/do-not-assume/check cards for overnight rules, LEZ, tolls, documents and winter requirements.
Germany
Germany is friendly to motorhome touring when you use signed Stellplaetze, campsites and normal legal parking. Wild camping is broadly restricted, and city access can depend on environmental stickers.
Treat an overnight roadside stop as parking, not camping: keep awnings, chairs, steps and leveling gear inside the vehicle footprint unless a site explicitly allows them.
Private leisure motorhomes are normally outside Germany's truck toll system, but heavy or goods-use vehicles need a closer check before travel. Many German low-emission zones require a valid environmental sticker, and foreign vehicles may need to apply before entering.
Bolivia
Bolivia motorhome travel is high-altitude and paperwork-heavy: plan SIVETUR tourist-vehicle registration, road-transitability checks, toll stops, authorised overnights, altitude acclimatisation and long service gaps.
Plan water, fuel, waste capacity, cash, food, tyre pressure and altitude days before leaving La Paz, Oruro, Uyuni, Tupiza, Potosi or major border towns.
Treat overnights as permission-based: use formal campings, hotels or hostels with secure parking, community tourism stops, private permission or clearly authorised protected-area sites.
Budget for tourist-vehicle registration steps, toll and weighing-control stops, protected-area or community fees, guides where required and recovery margins for remote-road delays. There is no simple national low-emission sticker for touring motorhomes, but practical access limits come from altitude cities, narrow streets, toll controls, protected areas and community-managed landscapes.
Overnight and wild camping
Treat an overnight roadside stop as parking, not camping: keep awnings, chairs, steps and leveling gear inside the vehicle footprint unless a site explicitly allows them.
- Wild camping away from designated areas is generally prohibited; use campsites, motorhome stopovers or signed trekking/camping areas.
- Local signs and municipal rules matter, especially near lakes, forests, nature reserves and tourist towns.
Treat overnights as permission-based: use formal campings, hotels or hostels with secure parking, community tourism stops, private permission or clearly authorised protected-area sites.
- Do not assume Salar de Uyuni pull-outs, lagoons, desert tracks, community land or protected landscapes allow overnight camping by default.
- Ask locally before setting camp near villages, mining roads, lagoons, border zones or national protected areas.